Over the past decade, tens of thousands of students from across the U.S. have participated in the Mastodon Matrix Project ™. The project has attracted considerable media attention, most recently an article first published in LiveScience.com:

If you would like to help more children become citizen scientists, find out how you can get involved.

Since August, 1999, PRI, in conjunction with Cornell University, has been involved with mastodon excavations in Hyde Park, NY and in Chemung County, NY (Cornell’s Gilbert Mastodon). Click below to find out more about the digs, research currently being done on both sites, and a host of other information.

Mastodons are extinct relatives of modern elephants which branched off the elephant family tree around 15 million years ago. Mastodons were numerous and widespread in North America up until around 10,000 years ago, when they became extinct together with many other species of large mammals at the end of the last glacial period.

Click Here for a printable pdf line drawing of the bones of a typical mastodon